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Part of the USA Today Sports Media Group

THT Daily: Rays vs. Red Sox next

by THT Staff
September 08, 2008

Player News
Yesterday’s Results
Today’s Games
Standings
Game of the Day
Yesterday’s Home Runs

You can always find the most recent THT Daily at http://www.hardballtimes.com/main/content/thtdaily/ and an archive at http://www.hardballtimes.com/main/thtdaily_index/

Player News

Player Headlines are courtesy of Rotoworld
image
Alex Cora flips over Marlon Byrd in yesterday's Red Sox/Rangers game (Icon/SMI)

Billy Wagner (elbow) had a setback during his simulated game Sunday and could miss the rest of the season. It was originally reported that he'd throw a bullpen session, but he took part in a simulated game anyway. Newsday reports that Wagner was pitching to Gustavo Molina when he bounced a fastball off Molina's foot. Soon after releasing the pitch, Wagner said, "That's it. I can't do it anymore." The closer will see a doctor tomorrow. It seems pretty unlikely that he'll be back to get any saves this month.

Cliff Lee limited the Royals to one run in 7 1/3 innings on Sunday to improve to 21-2. He allowed seven hits, hit a batter, and issued one walk while striking out five. The outing lowered his ERA to 2.28, leaving only Roy Halladay within half a run of Lee among qualified starters. It's an absolutely incredible season, in part because almost everything else has gone wrong for the Indians. Despite the fact that the club may finish under .500 and was never in contention, not even the BBWAA could screw up this voting and hand the Cy Young to someone else.

Chris Young took a perfect game into the eighth inning on Sunday but had it broken up by a two-out homer from Gabe Kapler. He went on to finish the game in a 10-1 victory and needed just 96 pitches to do so. Young ended up allowing one more hit in the ninth, a double to rookie Mat Gamel, while also striking out five. The right-hander struggled in his first start since returning from a strained forearm, but he looks fine to put back into fantasy lineups now.

Nate McLouth received six stitches to close a cut above his left eye after leaving Sunday's game. McLouth was hit by the ball while attemptign a sliding catch in the outfield. "I was actually lucky I was wearing sunglasses," he said. "The ball kind of glanced off them first." It looks like he's day-to-day. Nyjer Morgan and Steve Pearce would both start if McLouth needs to miss some time.

David Ortiz said after Sunday's game that he's been dealing with "clicking" in his damaged wrist. Ortiz suffered a torn left tendon sheath in his wrist on May 31 and missed nearly eight weeks. He said there's no pain in the wrist, but it still has him concerned. "If it was pain, I wouldn’t be playing," he said. "Pain won’t allow you to play like that. I just try to not think about it and just play. Since I got this thing, my whole swing has changed, you know? I mentally try to keep the same approach going to the plate and not think about it but it’s hard, man, really tough." It's just something he'll have to deal with for the rest of the year.

Yesterday’s Results

Game recaps provided by Craig Calcaterra of Shysterball.

Giants 11, Pirates 6: In 1908, the Giants had the league's best pitcher in Christy Mathewson, who led the NL in wins, games, complete games, strikeouts, ERA, and shutout 11 teams along the way. That same year, the Pittsburgh Pirates had the best hitter in the game, as Honus Wagner won the batting crown, led the league in RBI, doubles, triples, hits, stolen bases, on-base percentage and slugging percentage. Each team fell one game short of the pennant that season, losing the race, of course, to the Chicago Cubs, who are getting all of the centennial attention this season because 1908 was the last time they won it all. It only seems like the Giants and Pirates haven't been good since then.

Dodgers 5, Diamondbacks 3
: The Dodgers' winning streak and the fact that they've taken five straight against the Dbacks is probably more important, but I can't get past the fact that this game was intended to be Randy Johnson vs. Greg Maddux, yet the former was scrubbed due to a tried shoulder and the latter bumped because his manager thought a rookie would have a better shot against Arizona's lineup. I don't know about you, but I feel a little older this morning than I did yesterday.

Astros 7, Rockies 5: Cassel comes in for the injured starter and leads his team for victory. Same thing happened in this baseball game too.

Phillies 6, Mets 2; Mets 6, Phillies 3: Pedro is shelled (4 IP, 7 H, 6 ER), allowing the Phils to pull within one game of the Mets. Then the Phils can't do a whole lot against Johan Santana, dropping down to two back.

Mariners 5, Yankees 2: Now that New York has fallen into fourth place, is it too much to ask that game stories, recaps, and other assorted reportage about them not include their place in the wild card standings or refer to their playoff hopes, however dim? No one talked about the Blue Jays' chances when they were in fourth, and to be honest, no one is going to talk about them now that they're in third. Can we please now treat the Yankees like any other team playing out the string?

Cardinals 3, Marlins 1: The latest edition of Bill James' Historical Baseball Abstract came out in 2001. The blurb following the player rating for Doc Gooden read thusly:
When a young player comes to the major leagues and has success right away, writers will almost always write about what a fine young man he is as well as a supreme talent. Never pay any attention to those articles or those descriptions. Albert Pujols is going through this now . . . people who didn't know Albert Pujols from Jack the Ripper six months ago and have never talked to him more than six feet from his locker are writing very sincerely about what an exceptional young man he is . . . Sportswriters, despite their cynicism or because of it, desperately want to believe in athletes as heroes, and will project their hopes onto anyone who offers a blank slate. The problem with this is that, when the player turns out to be human and fallible, people feel betrayed. It is a disservice to athletes to try to make them more than they really are.
James' point remains a good one. His use of Albert Pujols to describe the phenomenon, however, has turned out to be something of a poor choice. Eight years into his career, Pujols remains by most accounts, everything the glorifiers thought he was back when he provided that blank slate. In addition to stringing together exceptional season after exceptional season, he does things like adopt a child with Down Syndrome. And then sponsor a charity that annually brings Down Syndrome kids to the ballpark and lets them run the bases and stuff. And then he hits a home run on that day and goes 10-for-24 with six homers and 11 RBIs in the six games in the charity's series.

I'm a cynical guy myself, so I'm not going to completely eliminate the possibility that one day they could find a bunch of dead hobos in Pujols' basement or something, but from where I'm sitting, Pujols is pretty much the Platonic Ideal when it comes to baseball players.

Red Sox 7, Rangers 2: If anyone out there believed at the time that the Paul Byrd deal was going to form the basis of a Red Sox September surge, please admit that you pulled such a prediction out of your patootie.

Blue Jays 1, Rays 0: Everyone always talks about teams in the Rays' place going on "skids." Skids themselves aren't that bad, though. I've skidded out on bikes and cars a zillion times. Heck, skidding can be fun! Rather than the skid itself, it's what follows the skid that matters. A nice little fishtail and then an acceleration onto dry pavement? No problem. A scary yet ultimately harmless trip over the handlebars and onto wet grass? Hey, kinda fun! A three game series against a resurgent Red Sox team? I guess we'll know by the time we go to bed on Wednesday night.

Padres 10, Brewers 1: Chris Young gets the complete game, giving up only one run on two hits to beat Milwaukee. Only needed 96 pitches to do it, too. It's been fun to try to come up with those Spahn and Sain jokes, but really, if the Brewers hold on, we're going to have the closest thing to a two-man rotation we've seen since the 2001 Diamondbacks rode Schilling and Johnson.

Tigers 7, Twins 5: Hey Twins, you can start taking advantage of that Carlos Quentin injury any time you'd like. No need to wait for permission. Just go out there and claim the division, OK? Anyone? Lost in the disappointing Tigers' season is the fact that Curtis Granderson is once again having a marvelous year (.309/.391/.527).

Nationals 7, Braves 4: There's a non-trivial chance that the Nats could pass the Braves for fourth place in the NL East before the end of the year. Part of me is actually rooting for such an outcome, as awful as it sounds, so that Frank Wren doesn't enter the offseason with anything approaching hope that this team was just a few breaks away from something good. If that happens, he may just try to tweak things or rearrange some deck chairs when more drastic measures are necessary. You finish below the Nats, though, and you can forget hope and get on with the hard work at hand with relative peace of mind.

Indians 3, Royals 1: You really have to look hard to find a chink in Cliff Lee's armor this season. The best I can do is to note that four of his 21 wins have come against the noodle-bat Royals, which is more than he has won against any other team. Yeah, it's a stretch, but I'm running out of ways to describe just how damn good he's been this year.

Angels 3, White Sox 2: Joe Saunders gets his first win since July, and now the magic number is three.

Reds 4, Cubs 3: A couple friends of mine are big Reds fans, and they were heading down to the Queen City to take this series in, convinced that they were going to be outnumbered and outshouted by Cubs partisans. Well, they were outnumbered, but the interlopers didn't have all that much to shout about in this series, as the Reds take two of three and make Chicago look pretty bad in the process.

You can download a compact version of yesterday's boxscores from Heater Magazine.

First Inning's Major and Minor League Daily Reports:

Today’s Games

National League
 ---------------
 Florida Marlins at Philadelphia Phillies, 7:05 PM
  (R) Anibal Sanchez (2-3) vs. (R) Joe Blanton (1-0)
 Cincinnati Reds at Milwaukee Brewers, 8:05 PM
  (R) Edinson Volquez (16-5) vs. (R) Dave Bush (9-10)
 Pittsburgh Pirates at Houston Astros, 8:05 PM
  (R) Ian Snell (6-10) vs. (R) Alberto Arias (0-0)
 Los Angeles Dodgers at San Diego Padres, 10:05 PM
  (R) Greg Maddux (7-11) vs. (R) Cha Seung Baek (4-9)
 Arizona Diamondbacks at San Francisco Giants, 10:15 PM
  (R) Yusmeiro Petit (3-4) vs. (R) Tim Lincecum (15-3)
 
 American League
 ---------------
 Oakland Athletics at Detroit Tigers, 7:05 PM
  (L) Gio Gonzalez (1-3) vs. (R) Zach Miner (8-4)
 Cleveland Indians at Baltimore Orioles, 7:05 PM
  (R) Fausto Carmona (8-5) vs. (L) Garrett Olson (8-7)
 Tampa Bay Rays at Boston Red Sox, 7:05 PM
  (R) Edwin Jackson (11-9) vs. (L) Jon Lester (13-5)
 Toronto Blue Jays at Chicago White Sox, 8:11 PM
  (R) A.J. Burnett (16-10) vs. (R) Javier Vazquez (11-12)
 New York Yankees at LA Angels of Anaheim, 10:05 PM
  (R) Carl Pavano (2-0) vs. (R) Jon Garland (12-8)

Standings

The graphics next to each team are called "sparklines.” They depict each team’s performance over the last month. Each "up" bar is a victory and a "down" bar is a loss. There are horizontal lines for home games and red bars represent games decided by two runs or less. "PWins" is short for Projected Wins, based on each team’s Run Differential, and is often a better measure of a team’s true strength. Other team graphs and stats can be found on our Team Page.
American League East        Pwins  Diff
TB      85  56 .603    0.0   79     6    sparkline graph
BOS     84  58 .592    1.5   86    -2    sparkline graph
TOR     76  66 .535    9.5   81    -5    sparkline graph
NYA     76  67 .531   10.0   76     0    sparkline graph
BAL     63  78 .447   22.0   66    -3    sparkline graph
American League Central     
CHA     80  62 .563    0.0   80     0    sparkline graph
MIN     78  65 .545    2.5   79    -1    sparkline graph
CLE     69  72 .489   10.5   75    -6    sparkline graph
DET     69  74 .483   11.5   70    -1    sparkline graph
KC      61  81 .430   19.0   58     3    sparkline graph
American League West        
LAA     86  56 .606    0.0   77     9    sparkline graph
TEX     70  74 .486   17.0   66     4    sparkline graph
OAK     65  77 .458   21.0   67    -2    sparkline graph
SEA     56  86 .394   30.0   60    -4    sparkline graph


National League East        Pwins  Diff
NYN     80  63 .559    0.0   80     0    sparkline graph
PHI     78  65 .545    2.0   81    -3    sparkline graph
FLA     72  71 .503    8.0   68     4    sparkline graph
ATL     62  82 .431   18.5   69    -7    sparkline graph
WAS     56  88 .389   24.5   56     0    sparkline graph
National League Central     
CHN     86  57 .601    0.0   89    -3    sparkline graph
MIL     82  61 .573    4.0   79     3    sparkline graph
STL     77  66 .538    9.0   77     0    sparkline graph
HOU     76  67 .531   10.0   69     7    sparkline graph
CIN     64  79 .448   22.0   62     2    sparkline graph
PIT     60  82 .423   25.5   58     2    sparkline graph
National League West        
LAN     73  70 .510    0.0   74    -1    sparkline graph
ARI     71  71 .500    1.5   72    -1    sparkline graph
COL     67  77 .465    6.5   66     1    sparkline graph
SF      62  80 .437   10.5   59     3    sparkline graph
SD      55  88 .385   18.0   60    -5    sparkline graph


Wildcard Standings
American League             
BOS     84  58 .592    0.0
MIN     78  65 .545    6.5
TOR     76  66 .535    8.0
NYA     76  67 .531    8.5
CLE     69  72 .489   14.5
National League             
MIL     82  61 .573    0.0
PHI     78  65 .545    4.0
STL     77  66 .538    5.0
HOU     76  67 .531    6.0
FLA     72  71 .503   10.0

Game of the Day

CHICAGO CUBS (3) VS CINCINNATI (4) - FINAL

CHICAGO CUBS           ab  r  h rbi bb so lob   avg
A Soriano lf            3  0  0  0   2  1   2  .289
M Hoffpauir rf          3  1  1  0   1  0   0  .333
 N Cotts p              0  0  0  0   0  0   0  .000
 C Marmol p             0  0  0  0   0  0   0  .000
 b-D Ward ph            1  0  0  0   0  0   1  .221
 K Wood p               0  0  0  0   0  0   0  .000
D Lee 1b                4  0  1  0   1  0   3  .296
A Ramirez 3b            5  0  2  0   0  2   2  .275
G Soto c                3  1  0  0   0  1   2  .290
M DeRosa 2b             2  1  0  0   1  0   2  .288
J Edmonds cf            3  0  0  0   1  1   3  .234
R Theriot ss            2  0  1  0   0  0   0  .310
 R Cedeno ss            2  0  1  1   0  0   2  .285
S Marshall p            2  0  1  0   0  1   0  .417
 a-M Fontenot ph        0  0  0  1   0  0   0  .301
 K Fukudome rf          1  0  0  0   0  1   0  .262

Totals                 31  3  7  2   6  7  17

a-hit sacrifice fly to right for S Marshall in the 7th;  b-fouled out to third 
for C Marmol in the 9th.

BATTING: 2B - R Cedeno (10, A Harang); A Ramirez (38, D Weathers). SF - M 
Fontenot. RBI - R Cedeno (27), M Fontenot (36). Runners left in scoring 
position, 2 out - D Lee 2, M DeRosa 1, A Ramirez 1, R Cedeno 1. GIDP - G Soto, 
A Soriano. Team LOB - 10. 
 
BASERUNNING: SB - A Soriano 2 (19, 2nd base off A Harang/R Hanigan, 2nd base 
off F Cordero/R Hanigan). 
 
FIELDING: E - N Cotts (2, catch); J Edmonds (6, bobble). Outfield assists - A 
Soriano (J Votto at Home). DP: 1 (A Soriano-G Soto). 
 
CINCINNATI             ab  r  h rbi bb so lob   avg
J Cabrera lf            5  0  1  1   0  2   1  .289
J Keppinger ss          3  0  0  0   1  0   1  .264
B Phillips 2b           4  0  0  0   0  2   1  .262
J Votto 1b              3  0  0  0   1  0   1  .292
E Encarnacion 3b        4  1  2  0   0  0   1  .254
J Bruce rf              2  1  1  0   1  1   0  .259
R Hanigan c             3  1  0  0   1  0   4  .279
C Patterson cf          2  0  1  1   0  0   3  .204
 b-J Valentin ph        0  0  0  0   1  0   0  .246
 W Castillo pr          0  1  0  0   0  0   0  .333
A Harang p              1  0  0  0   0  0   2  .130
 a-A Phillips ph        1  0  0  0   0  1   1  .210
 D Weathers p           0  0  0  0   0  0   0  .000
 F Cordero p            0  0  0  0   0  0   0  .000
 c-C Dickerson ph       1  0  1  2   0  0   0  .322

Totals                 29  4  6  4   5  6  15

a-struck out swinging for A Harang in the 7th;  b-walked for C Patterson in the 
9th;  c-doubled to shortstop for F Cordero in the 9th.

BATTING: 2B - C Dickerson (9, K Wood). S - A Harang. SF - C Patterson. RBI - C 
Patterson (28), C Dickerson 2 (15), J Cabrera (9). Runners left in scoring 
position, 2 out - A Harang 1, J Keppinger 1. Team LOB - 8. 
 
BASERUNNING: SB - J Votto (6, 2nd base off S Marshall/G Soto). 
 
FIELDING: DP: 2 (J Keppinger-B Phillips-J Votto, E Encarnacion-J Votto). 
 
----------------------------------------------------
    CHICAGO CUBS    - 000 100 200   --   3
    CINCINNATI      - 010 000 003   --   4

One out when winning run scored.
----------------------------------------------------

CHICAGO CUBS                 ip       h   r  er  bb  so  hr    era
S Marshall                    6       3   1   1   2   3   0   3.77
N Cotts (H, 7)                  2/3   0   0   0   0   1   0   3.94
C Marmol (H, 26)              1 1/3   0   0   0   1   2   0   2.62
K Wood (L, 4-4; B, 6)           1/3   3   3   3   2   0   0   3.26

CINCINNATI                   ip       h   r  er  bb  so  hr    era
A Harang                      7       6   3   3   3   5   0   5.18
D Weathers                    1       1   0   0   1   1   0   3.23
F Cordero (W, 5-4)            1       0   0   0   2   1   0   3.47

IBB - J Edmonds (by D Weathers). HBP - J Bruce (by S Marshall); G Soto (by A 
Harang); M DeRosa (by A Harang). Pitches-strikes: S Marshall 103-64; N Cotts 
11-8; C Marmol 22-11; K Wood 28-14; A Harang 111-68; D Weathers 18-8; F Cordero 
24-13. Ground balls-fly balls: S Marshall 7-7; N Cotts 0-1; C Marmol 2-0; K 
Wood 1-0; A Harang 10-6; D Weathers 0-2; F Cordero 0-2. Batters faced: S 
Marshall 23; N Cotts 3; C Marmol 5; K Wood 6; A Harang 30; D Weathers 5; F 
Cordero 5. 
 
UMPIRES: HP--Scott Barry. 1B--Greg Gibson. 2B--Charlie Reliford. 3B--Brian 
Runge. 

T--3:02. Att--37,540. 
Weather: 75 degrees, partly cloudy. Wind: 6 mph, left 
to right.

The following graph tracks the game's Win Probability, courtesy of Fan Graphs. You can also view live WPA graphs at Fangraphs during any ballgame all season long.

image

Yesterday’s Home Runs

The following stats are provided by Hit Tracker, which logs the projected “true” distance of each home run (if it were to land uninterrupted at field level) and its "standard" distance, which is corrected for weather conditions. Each homer is also categorized into one of three types: Just Enough (JE) for homers that cleared the fence by ten feet or less, Plenty (PL) for those that were sure home runs but not “blasts,” and No Doubt (ND) for true “blasts”—homers that cleared the fence by at least 20 feet and landed at least 50 feet beyond the fence.
Hitter                Team    Pitcher              Team   True   Stnd.  # Type
Jason Bay             BOS     Jamey Wright         TEX     374    363  27  PL
Adrian Beltre         SEA     Mike Mussina         NYY     358    342  27  PL/L
Miguel Cabrera        DET     Glen Perkins         MIN     366    361  32  JE
Carlos Delgado        NYM     Cole Hamels          PHI     430    427  32  ND
Carlos Delgado        NYM     Cole Hamels          PHI     422    419  31  ND
Greg Dobbs            PHI     Pedro Martinez       NYM     386    382   8  JE
Adam Dunn             ARI     Clayton Kershaw      LAD     407    400  36  PL
Alberto Gonzalez      WAS     Julian Tavarez       ATL     396    383   1  JE/L
Toby Hall             CWS     Joe Saunders         LAA     379    364   2  PL
Brad Hawpe            COL     Chris Sampson        HOU     384    360  22  JE
Chase Headley         SD      Manny Parra          MIL     356    351   9  JE
Ryan Howard           PHI     Johan Santana        NYM     409    405  40  PL
Mike Jacobs           FLA     Adam Wainwright      STL     415    410  30  PL
Derek Jeter           NYY     Ryan Feierabend      SEA     393    390  10  PL
Gabe Kapler           MIL     Chris Young          SD      405    384   8  ND
Paul Konerko          CWS     Joe Saunders         LAA     416    405  16  PL
Kevin Kouzmanoff      SD      David Riske          MIL     416    398  21  PL
Jose Lopez            SEA     Mike Mussina         NYY     362    367  14  JE
Jose Lopez            SEA     Jose Veras           NYY     350    354  13  JE
Lastings Milledge     WAS     Jo-Jo Reyes          ATL     381    371  14  JE
Xavier Nady           NYY     Ryan Feierabend      SEA     418    424  23  ND
Magglio Ordonez       DET     Boof Bonser          MIN     430    424  18  ND
David Ortiz           BOS     Brandon McCarthy     TEX     451    439  18  ND
Albert Pujols         STL     Josh Johnson         FLA     407    401  32  PL
Dusty Ryan            DET     Glen Perkins         MIN     351    347   1  JE
Chris Snyder          ARI     Clayton Kershaw      LAD     399    391  14  PL
Taylor Teagarden      TEX     Manny Delcarmen      BOS     404    397   3  PL

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